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Comment and Life

The fruit fly formerly known as Drosophila

By Kim Van Der Linde and Amir Yassin

22 June 2010

Âé¶¹´«Ã½. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

My name is…?

(Image: janeff/iStock)

Kim van der Linde

Common names of plants and animals often differ dramatically from country to country. In the past, this caused endless confusion and misunderstanding among scientists. To resolve this difficulty, 16th-century naturalists developed a standardised naming scheme that was later perfected by Carl Linnaeus. Under this scheme, each species has a two-part name. The first is the genus name, which is shared by several closely related species. The second is the species name.

To promote stability, there are rules governing the naming of species. Even so, names sometimes change, and species can be…

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